a daemon that keeps your MPD playlist filled with the music you actually listen to.
- python 3.x
- python-mpd2
If you have pip installed, a simple pip install -r requirements.txt
should do the job.
autoplay.py [command]
command can be one of :
radio [on|off|toggle] : switches between radio mode and stat collection only
trigger [number] : sets how many tracks must be in the playlist at all times
info [filename] : gives some info on the specified track, or the currently playing track
start
stop (synonym: kill)
loglevel [debug|info|notice|warning|error]
help
version
To have autoplay start automatically, you may add autoplay.py start > /dev/null &
to your .profile
or .bash_profile
.
Make sure you have all dependencies installed, then put autoplay.py
anywhere in your $PATH
.
Autoplay will connect to the server according to environment variables MPD_HOST
and MPD_PORT
.
The defaults are :
MPD_HOST="127.0.0.1"
MPD_PORT="6600"
A password can be used by using the syntax MPD_HOST="password@host"
.
If the variable MPD_MUSIC_DIR
is set, Autoplay will use it to flag symlinks or hardlinks as duplicates.
Autoplay gives each song a karma rating based on how often it adds that song, and how often that song is played.
Usually, bad songs have karma under 0.25, meh songs have karma between 0.25 and 0.60, and good songs are over 0.60. A song that is often added by the user to the playlist will have a karma over 1.
When a song is played, there is a cooldown time (default 12h) during which autoplay cannot add it. This way, the same songs cannot be spammed over and over.